Title: Deployment Policies Using Technology Learning National case studies from IEA countries
1Deployment Policies Using Technology
LearningNational case studies from IEA countries
Leo Schrattenholzer Environmentally Compatible
Energy Strategies Project (ECS) International
Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
(IIASA) www.iiasa.ac.at/Research/ECS
IEA Workshop on Experience Curves A Tool for
Energy Policy Analysis and Design, Paris 22-24
January 2003
2Presentation Outline
- Learning The case for policy making
- The IEA case studies on deployment
- Typical case studies
- Policy-relevant observations and conclusions
- Caveats
3Total Annual Energy System Investments Cost, Two
Cases
Messner (1997)
4Policy Implications
- Learning creates a public good
- Learning of carbon-free technologies
- Defining ambition levels with learning rates
- Balancing present costs and future benefits
(addressing the free-rider issue)
5Lessons Learned in Technology Deployment
Policies Process of Collecting and Analysing Case
Studies
Apr/June 2001 CERT decision on Workshop
Nov. 2001 Workshop Technologies require Markets
Oct. 2000 20 Case Studies available
June/Nov 1999CERT launching of Project
July 2000 55 Proposals
2002 IEA Publication
Spring 2000 Proposals for Case Studies
through IEA Working Parties
Aug. 2000 Selection of 25 Case Studies
Nov 2000- Nov 2001 Analysis at Secretariat
Source IEA
6The Triangulation Model (IEA)
Industry Strategy (RD funding)
RD-D Model
Technology Learning
Risk, Cost
Niche Markets
Barrier Model
MT Model
Institutional Learning
Physical Effect
Information, Marketing
Customer Attitude (Understand, Address)
Market Framework (Rules, regulation)
7Examples of Case Studies
- District heating with biomass in Austria
- Total service packages for energy conservation
- Energy labelling in Denmark
- Market transformation on lighting (Sweden)
- Energy Efficiency Best Practice Programme (UK)
- Unconventional natural gas exploration/production
(US) - Clean Coal Technology demonstration program (US)
8The Deployment Model
- Learning curves (technological progress)
- Estimate learning rates
- Calculate learning investments
- Calculate technology cost reduction
- Assess other impacts (induced RD etc.)
- Niche markets to reduce learning costs
9Three Price Curves, PV Systems Wene (1999)
10
10
)
)
Wp
Wp
2007
2010
2007
2010
1998
1998
3 USD/
Wp
System Price (US(1997)/
System Price (US(1997)/
3 USD/
Wp
Price in Japan
Price in Japan
World market
World market
2006
2006
Historical Growth
Historical Growth
Stagnant
Stagnant
Strong Growth
Strong Growth
1
1
10
100
1000
10000
10
100
1000
10000
Cumulative Installations in Japan's PV
-
Roof
Programme
(MW)
Cumulative Installations in Japan's PV
-
Roof
Programme
(MW)
10Learning Investments, PV-Systems Wene (1999)
20
18
16
14
12
10
Learning Investments to Reach 3 USD/Wp
(BUSD(1997))
8
6
4
2
0
Historical Growth
Stagnant
Strong Growth
Japan Subsidies
Japan Niche Market
Outside Japan
11Learning Curve, HF Electronic BallastsSweden
1990-1995, LR5.1
12Policy-Relevant Issues Related to Learning
- Costs and prices
- Learning and diffusion
- Learning and information dissemination
- Risk of learning investments
- Non-cost indicators of progress, e. g.,
efficiency - Target setting
- Intact market mechanisms
13Price Pattern for a New Product(IEA, 2000 and
Boston Consulting Group, 1968)
14Conclusions and Observations
- Different aspects of technological learning can
be found in most case studies - Often these aspects are hidden
- Learning investments can take many different
(policy-relevant) forms - Niche markets
- Procurement
- Guaranteed prices
15Policy Recommendations
- To maintain the functioning of the learning
mechanism, the element of competition should be
maintained despite possible subsidies - Identify learning possibilities
- Use the learning-curve concept to define goals
and to monitor the impact of deployment projects - Relevant externalities Information, risk of
investment
16Caveats
- Prices vs. costs
- Public risks of deployment
- over-stimulation of markets
- learning rates turning out lower than expected
- Private risks of deployment
- Unwanted spillover, leading to lower returns on
investment
17 18-
Input
Output
-
Stock of RD
Total Cost
Industry RD
Technology
Production
Experience Curve
Wene98